With the help of camera-tracking technology, the team spent years inventing a computer program that (among other things) shows you what every Raptors player should have done on every defensive possession.

The only problem with playing super-aggressive help defense is that you get tired. The computer says players should be running all over the place all the time, but actual, human NBA players don't have the ability to sustain that type of energy.

"The Heat have three of the best wing defenders in the league in Shane Battier, LeBron James, and Dwyane Wade, and the latter two are among the NBA's most gifted pure athletes. James can mimic [a computerized] hyperactive ghost in a way no other player can, Rucker says. 'LeBron basically messes up the system and the ghosts,' Rucker says. 'He does things that are just unsustainable for most players.'"

Defense is notoriously hard to objectively quantify, but as new methods for evaluating defense continue to emerge, we'll probably see more and more proof that LeBron is just as dominant on that end of the court as he is on offense.

By the time LeBron's career is over and we're judging his legacy, he might get the benefit of something that none of his predecessors got — we'll have objective measures for how well he plays defense.

With the rudimentary stats available to us now, we know LeBron is a good defender, but only in a general sense.

In a few years — with the type of analytics stuff the Raptors and other are doing — we'll be able to say things like, "Look, LeBron was only out of position X number of times in 2015-16," or, "Look, LeBron prevented X number of open threes with help defense in 2015-16."